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- 112 pages
- 4 hours of reading
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A lake is a body of water, but it can also be the place of community. During the 1930s, a small creek in central Illinois was dammed and flooded to provide water and power to a growing nearby city. The place was already rich with history, dotted with 10,000 years of archaeological remains, crossed by a 300-year French colonial road, and the encompassing farms and small towns frequented by a young Abraham Lincoln. The vision for Lake Springfield included much more than a source of drinking water and power for the city of Springfield. During a nationwide depression, city planners and engineers thoughtfully created a unique municipal, recreational, and residential community along the new shores. Parks, beach houses, numerous organizational clubs, scouting camps for children, a memorial garden, a nature preserve, an outdoor theater, and even a public zoo soon skirted the 4000-acre lake. Now, eighty-five years after its construction, Lake Springfield is a community with its own rich history.
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Lake Springfield in Illinois: Public Works and Community Design in the Mid-Twentieth Century, Robert Mazrim, Curtis Mann
- Language
- Released
- 2021
- product-detail.submit-box.info.binding
- (Paperback)
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- Title
- Lake Springfield in Illinois: Public Works and Community Design in the Mid-Twentieth Century
- Language
- English
- Authors
- Robert Mazrim, Curtis Mann
- Publisher
- Arcadia Publishing (SC)
- Released
- 2021
- Format
- Paperback
- Pages
- 112
- ISBN13
- 9781634992930
- Series
- Tags
- Non-Fiction, Art & Culture, Historical Themes, Photographic Publications, Water management and Hydrology
- Rating
- 4.2 out of 5
- Description
- A lake is a body of water, but it can also be the place of community. During the 1930s, a small creek in central Illinois was dammed and flooded to provide water and power to a growing nearby city. The place was already rich with history, dotted with 10,000 years of archaeological remains, crossed by a 300-year French colonial road, and the encompassing farms and small towns frequented by a young Abraham Lincoln. The vision for Lake Springfield included much more than a source of drinking water and power for the city of Springfield. During a nationwide depression, city planners and engineers thoughtfully created a unique municipal, recreational, and residential community along the new shores. Parks, beach houses, numerous organizational clubs, scouting camps for children, a memorial garden, a nature preserve, an outdoor theater, and even a public zoo soon skirted the 4000-acre lake. Now, eighty-five years after its construction, Lake Springfield is a community with its own rich history.